
Pakistan’s current account deficit has widened sharply to $733 million in the first four months of FY26, a staggering 256pc increase from last year. Fresh State Bank data shows that the deficit is being fuelled not by productive investment but by soaring imports and weakening investor confidence.
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Imports of goods and services jumped by 15pc and 12pc respectively, even as foreign direct investment fell by 26pc. Economists warn that the surge is misleading, as much of the import growth stems from consumption-led decisions rather than industrial expansion.
A closer look at the composition of imports reveals troubling patterns. Large volumes of petroleum and transport goods — including electric buses and cars — are being imported without generating future dollar income. The rise in consumer-oriented imports contrasts with stagnant exports and highlights a trade policy struggling to correct external imbalances.
Pakistan just printed a trade number that blows a hole straight through the stability and recovery narrative.
In November 2025, the trade deficit hit roughly $2.86–2.9 billion about one‑third higher than the same month last year, when the gap was around $2.15 billion. Exports… pic.twitter.com/lKLWRUyP6p
— brief. (@brief_pk) December 2, 2025
Experts argue that politically influenced choices, such as costly sugar imports, have only worsened domestic distortions. Similarly, subsidised electric bus projects raise concerns regarding cost recovery and long-term fiscal sustainability.
Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves, standing at $14.6bn, offer limited buffer amid rising debt repayments and a widening CAD. Analysts caution that financing the deficit through short-term flows is risky, especially if global conditions shift or remittances decline.
To stabilise the external sector, economists call for disciplined import management rather than a laissez-faire approach. They recommend an ‘import on merit’ system — similar to Singapore’s permit model — to curb unnecessary imports while prioritising essential and productive ones.
On the export side, specialists emphasise liberalisation and value addition, noting that bans on commodities like pulses and wheat flour hurt growth. They say Pakistan should incentivise industries that turn raw materials into exportable finished goods and link import privileges to verified export performance.
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Without decisive reforms, the $733m deficit could mark the beginning of deeper instability. Experts warn that Pakistan cannot sustain growth by consuming foreign exchange it has borrowed.